Tiger has been performing at a much higher level recently. He posted three good rounds at the Australian Open in November. However, a disappointing third round three-over par 75 moved him down the leader board. He recovered with a five-under par 67 on Sunday to eventually finish third.

Tiger, a Captain’s pick, then moved onto the Presidents Cup at Royal Melbourne. He played solid but not spectacular until Sunday when he buried Aaron Baddeley in his singles match.

In December, Tiger won his first event of any kind in over two years when he won the small field invitation-only Chevron World Challenge. His four round scores — 69, 67, 73, 69 — were fairly solid but that third round 73 allowed the field to slip back into contention and he was forced to hold off Zach Johnson on Sunday.

Enter 2012. Everyone is beginning to feel that just maybe Tiger is on the verge of regaining the form that allowed him to dominate golf for over 10 years.

He made his 2012 debut not at Torrey Pines as he normally does but took a large appearance fee and decided to play in Abu Dhabi on the European Tour. Again he played well, posting rounds of 70, 69 and 66 but faltered on Sunday, shooting an even par 72 and fell to third place behind winner Robert Rock and runner-up Rory McIlroy.

Are we beginning to see the trend here? Tiger posts three solid rounds but he can’t seem close the deal.

Now we come to Pebble Beach and the monumental beat down by Phil Mickelson on Sunday. Tiger again posted a respectable first three rounds — 68, 68, 67 — and started Sunday’s final round at 11 under par, four shots behind leader Charlie Wi. Well, we all saw what happened. Phil Mickelson in the same grouping with Woods turned in a magnificent 64 and went on to win the tournament. Tiger went in a completely different direction, shooting three-over par 75 and free falling to 15th place. Phil beat Tiger by 11 shots in that final round. If you are Tiger Woods, that is completely unacceptable.

The talking heads on Golf Channel have been saying since last year that Tiger needs more reps. Practice at home in his back yard in Jupiter, Fla., is not the same as the intense pressure of PGA Tour play. This is especially true when you are Tiger Woods, in contention and trying to make things happen in the heat of battle on a golf course.

The swing changes, putting stroke and his confidence level are not where they need to be to contend at the Masters.

Thus the decision has been made to add the Honda Classic to his schedule ahead of Augusta. Starting with next week’s WGC-Accenture Match Play in Arizona, Tiger will play three weeks consecutively. The Honda Classic at Palm Beach is the following week and that will lead into the WGC-Cadillac from Doral. It should be noted the Honda and Doral are basically home games for him.

Tiger has some glitches in his overall game that can only be cured by repetition under tournament conditions. His only goal is to win majors. Time is beginning to press in on him. He needs to get this right.

Adding the Honda Classic is the right decision.

Oh, and by the way, it helps the sponsor, the Palm Beach community, and the PGA Tour also.

If Tiger goes onto win at Augusta, should he thank Phil Mickelson during the Green Jacket ceremony?

This entry was posted
on Thursday, February 16th, 2012 at 1:04 am and is filed under Golf, Sports, The Back Nine.
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